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A Florida-based data broker has come under scrutiny for acquiring sensitive location data on United States military personnel stationed in Germany, according to a letter sent to Senator Ron Wyden. The data was traced back to Eskimi, a Lithuanian ad-tech company, revealing a concerning connection within the global online ad surveillance industry.
The investigation began after reports indicated that Datastream Group was selling precise location data potentially from U.S. military devices, including those stationed at airbases suspected of housing U.S. nuclear weapons. The dataset reportedly consisted of 3.6 billion location coordinates collected from up to 11 million mobile advertising IDs over a month. Zach Edwards, a senior threat analyst at Silent Push, highlighted that such data practices pose an "insider threat risk" to national security.
In response to the revelations, Wyden's office has sought explanations from both Datastream and Eskimi. Although Datastream claimed the data was sourced legitimately, the Lithuanian Data Protection Authority has yet to initiate an investigation into Eskimi despite growing concerns over potential violations of European data protection regulations.